Advice and Tips for first Puppy Grooms.

PUPPY TRAINING AND TIPS: TO EASE GROOMING.

We want your puppy to love visiting the groomers so we have put together some tips and advice that you can follow to help that happen. Everything you need to know to be fully prepared.

At The Doghouse Kendal, we want all of our dogs and customers to have a great grooming experience. The best way to achieve this, is to set up the foundations you need from the very start.

Your puppy’s mental health and wellbeing will always be our top priority, in return we ask you to help us do this by training them as best you can at home.

As soon as your puppy has had their immunisations and your vet has given them the thumbs up, we encourage you to bring them in for a puppy introduction with us. This can be as early as 12 weeks.

Ideally, we would like to see your puppy regularly until they are ready for their first full groom.

We really recommend thoroughly reading this from start to finish to help guide you too.

Follow These Steps:

We don’t expect any puppy who walks through our doors to stand as still as a statue on the table on their first visit. But we do expect them to have a minimum of training before you bring them in. The following steps outline the factors that need to be considered in how to prepare your puppy before bringing them to our salon.

  1. Daily Brushing

If your puppy does not like you brushing them, it won’t like us brushing them. If your puppy bites your brush, they will also bite our brushes. By training them to be brushed, and rewarded for good behaviour during brushing, you can guarantee that we will be able to do our best when they visit us.

  1. Sit

The “sit” command is a must, as it helps us ground the puppy when they are getting a bit excited. This is also the position we will need them to take when trimming their face. Training them to sit from an early age using positive reinforcement with treats is a trick that you'll thank yourself for teaching them through puppyhood and well into adulthood!

  1. Puppy Biting

Any work you can do at home on reducing puppy biting is also necessary. The sooner you can teach them that this behaviour will not be tolerated, and calm behaviour rewarded, the better. 

  1. Face Holding

The “face hold” is also incredibly important as it means that we can hold their face to brush and trim around their eyes with sharp scissors, without them moving. To teach them the “face hold,” start off by showing them you have a treat and asking them to sit. Then place your hand under their chin and hold the hair gently. After a couple of seconds of them staying still, reward them with a treat and/or praise. Then repeat this exercise until they will hold their face still for 30 seconds (or more!).

Once they are happy with you holding their chin, begin to stroke their face, between the eyes and above their head, and reward them for staying still. Once you can do this for 30 seconds, you can move onto brushing their face while holding their chin, and rewarding, increasing the time each time. Finally, while holding under their chin, either using a pen or the back of your comb, place the object (which is pretending to be our scissors) along their nose, on the corner of their eye and hold it there. Switching sides every 5/10 seconds. Building up to 30 seconds and rewarding for them for staying still.

We recommend working on this exercise a little each day and then using this technique when doing your daily brushing. You could also add a word command like “wait” to the action which will help ground them. Just make sure if you use a specific word command that you tell your groomer what it is and we can make a note of it.

  1. Feet Holding

Most dogs hate their feet being touched. This makes grooming them quite difficult. If from the day you get your puppy you touch and brush their feet, and reward them for letting you do so, they will then have less or no issues with us trimming them.

  1. Home Bathing

If you can bathe your puppy at home, then we would recommend doing so making sure you are using a puppy shampoo as their skin is sensitive.

This will mean it will not be a huge shock to them when we wash them.

  1. Dryers

Getting them used to the sound of the hair dryer or vacuum cleaner is also extremely helpful as this will get them used to all the loud noises in the salon. You can pop treats on the floor and blow them with your hair drier which can turn a scary noise into a fun treat dispenser.

  1. Separation Anxiety

Finally, you need to train your puppy to be alone or without you. A lot of puppies suffer from separation anxiety, and this has been more noticeable during the pandemic as owners have had less reason to leave their homes. Getting your puppy used to being left alone in a room or at home for short periods of time is crucial to them not being completely dependent on you. If you cannot get them used to being away from you as a puppy this will cause issues when they are grown up.

 

Something important to keep in mind before bringing your puppy to any groomers is that any behaviour your puppy has with you, will probably be the same with your groomer. We don’t have any magic tricks we can use to make the puppy behave, so it is down to you to train them at home.

 

Contact form